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Mouse Research Sheds New Light on Human Genetic Diseases
23 April 2003 -- A team of researchers headed by Douglas R.
Cavener, professor and head of the Department of Biology at Penn State
University, has announced important findings about the causes of three
human diseases: severe, juvenile-onset diabetes; osteoporosis; and Wolcott-Rallison
Syndrome, a rare condition whose sufferers exhibit a combination of diabetes,
retarded growth, and skeletal abnormalities. Their work suggests promising
lines of research for the therapeutic treatment of these diseases. The
work will be described in an article in the August 2003 issue of the journal
Endocrinology.
Over several years, Cavener's team has developed and investigated a particular
strain of "knockout" mice that are genetically unable to produce
the enzyme PERK (pancreatic endoplasmic reticulum kinase). Cavener and
his team hypothesize that the PERK enzyme is a specific or global regulator
of protein synthesis, which means that the knockout mice are especially
useful in unraveling complex physiological and developmental processes.
"We are now able to investigate what happens when a particular gene
is missing, to see what functions go wrong. Then we work backwards to
fill in mechanisms that link the genotype to the phenotype" or the
observable outcome, Cavener says.
PERK knockout mice have a very low survival rate because the biomedical
problems caused by the absence of the PERK enzyme are so severe. Fully
63 percent die during gestation or the first few days of life which can
be traced to failures in the creation or delivery of specific proteins.
The
surviving PERK knockout mice have three distinct problems that parallel
those seen in humans with Wolcott-Rallison Syndrome. First, the knockout
mice grow very slowly so that, as adults, they are about half the size
of normal mice. They are strikingly deficient in a factor which regulates
growth known as IGF-1. Newborn knockout mice average only about 25% as
much IGF-1 in their liver and serum as normal mice. Second, knockout mice
have many skeletal abnormalities such as dangerously fragile and porous
bones, hunched backs, and splayed limbs. These abnormalities are caused
by a lack of collagen, a major structural component of bone. Third, the
ability of knockout mice to use sugar (glucose) is abnormal. At birth,
the mice are apparently healthy in this regard, with normal levels of
glucose and glucose products in their livers and normal numbers of insulin-producing
beta cells in their pancreases. After three weeks, juvenile knockout mice
develop severe diabetes. Their glucose levels soar to three to four times
normal levels and the number of beta cells in their pancreases is reduced.
After six weeks, insulin-producing beta cells are rare or completely absent.
In one experiment, Cavener and colleagues focused on the mechanisms behind
the retarded growth of PERK knockout mice. By injecting the PERK knockout
mice with IGF-1 twice daily during the first three weeks of life, researchers
were able to accelerate the neonatal growth rate of the mice. Their growth
was markedly improved but not restored to normal rates. They concluded
that defects in the regulation of IGF-1 were at least partially responsible
for the retarded growth rates in PERK deficient mice. The improvement
produced by treating the mice with IGF-1 has exciting implications for
developing therapeutic interventions for people diagnosed with Wolcott-Rallison
Syndrome.
Cavener emphasizes that it is extremely important that the growth and
skeletal problems occur earlier than and independently from the diabetes
in these mice. "Knowing which problems are the primary effects of
diabetes, and which are independent effects produced by a defect in the
same gene, may be of great importance in treating the disease," Cavener
predicts.
In a second experiment, Cavener and his colleagues demonstrated the complexity
of the various functions of the PERK gene. They produced transgenic mice
that carried a single copy of the PERK gene that was expressed only in
the insulin-producing beta cells. Normal mice carry two copies of this
gene and knockout mice have none. The PERK gene produced a dramatic change
in glucose metabolism. Unlike PERK deficient mice, transgenic mice do
not become diabetic as juveniles and retain normal numbers of insulin-producing
beta cells.
During
the neonatal period the transgenic mice still suffered from retarded growth.
Surprisingly, Cavener's team found that the transgenic mice resumed normal
rates of growth as they aged past three weeks. This finding suggests that
the slowed rate of growth in juvenile knockout mice is probably a secondary
effect of diabetes.
The results of this research program lead Cavener to theorize that the
major function of PERK is to sense the activity of cells that secrete
such vital proteins as insulin and collagen and to signal the cells to
adjust their rate of secretion or cell division to match the needs of
the body for these important proteins. Much of the current research in
Cavener's group focuses on testing this hypothesis.
In addition to Cavener, other members of the research team include: Ami
Frank, Kaori Iida, Sheng'ai Li, Yulin Li, Shun-Hsin
Liang, Barbara McGrath, Jeff O'Neil, Jamie Reinert,
Frank Zambito, Peichuan Zhang, and Wei Zhang, all
of Penn State; Maureen Gannon of the Vanderbilt University School
of Medicine; Kun Ma of the Indiana University School of Medicine,
and Kelly McNaughton of Vanderbilt University. This research was
funded by the Culpeper Foundation, the Vanderbilt Clinical Nurition Research
Unit, Penn State University, and National Institutes of Health grant GM56957
to Cavener.
[ P. L. S. ]
CONTACTS:
Douglas R. Cavener: phone (+1) 814-865-4562, e-mail <drc9@psu.edu>
Barbara K. Kennedy (PIO): (+1)814-863-4682, science@psu.edu
| IMAGES: Click on the images below for high resolution images. |
|
| Three mice that are littermates (siblings of the same age). The two mice on the left (one partially hiding under the big mouse) are dwarf mice caused by the Perk mutation. They are less than half the size of the mouse on the right, which is normal. | |
| Micro x-ray computed tomography (microCT) images of the tibia of normal and Perk mutant mice. The mutant shows thin cortical bone with deformations and gaping holes. "If it wasn't for muscle and connective tissue to hold these fragile bones together, these mice would fall apart," Cavener says. | |
PREPRINT OF PAPER:
Contact Dr. Cavener or Barbara Kennedy (see "contacts" above) to receive a reprint of previous published papers from the Cavener lab that contributed significantly to the current study. A preprint of the current paper is avaiable via doi:10.1210/en.2003-0236 and http://endo.endojournals.org/cgi/rapidpdf/en.2003-0236
This page is maintained by Barbara K. Kennedy: science@psu.edu, (814) 863-4682; Kristen Devlin: krd111@psu.edu, (814) 863-8453; and Sara LaJeunesse: sdl13@psu.edu, (814) 865-1390.
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